Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Small linux distro for displaying advertisements/banners Post 302592153 by sulti on Monday 23rd of January 2012 02:19:10 AM
Old 01-23-2012
Ubuntu will do, but I've just switched to regular desktop with 'command-line install' option and just added xorg and openbox.
Ghash, which I used, was probably working on gstreamer, and as a standalone player - because I was trying to make it minimalistic Smilie
I know about none hardware acceleration for flash, but unfortunately this is required format...
ffmpeg won't convert .swf file becasue of lacking support for 'compressed swf format' or whatever it's issue is.
So... I think I'm close, the only thing I don't like for now is setting fullscreen in adobe's flashplayer - I have to send Control+F with xsendkey...

Thanks and greetings.

Oh, and mouse cursor is disabled with 'unclutter'. :-)
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Linux distro

Hi I'm have old toshiba laptop(t1900) 486, 4mbRAM and ~120MB of hdd I'm looking for distro to suite my comp, no need for X windows but not enything that runs on FAT, just normal small Linux. Actually, *BSDs will do as well. If u know any distro that would do this I will be thankful for hint ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: wolk
4 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Copying a Linux distro from one partition to the other...

Hola. Here is how my partition table looks: Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System /dev/hde1 1 1689 13566861 7 HPFS/NTFS /dev/hde2 * 1690 2783 8787555 83 Linux /dev/hde3 2784 2813 240975 82 Linux swap /dev/hde4 ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mr_Proper
5 Replies

3. AIX

A thing AIX would do it like no other Linux distro?

Hi, I would like to know, is there a thing that AIX would do it, and RHEL or SLES would not? Something specific and great in the same time. It might sound weird, but I'm very curios. Thanks a lot guys! (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: aixn00b
7 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

New to linux. Which distro should i use?

want to know which Linux distro is 4 me. want 2 teach my self programing and problem solving. i want to learn code and write code. i have an acer aspire one 2GB memory 160 GB HDD intel Atom. look im as noobie as it gets im a MS xp, vista boy want to go beyond graphical click and do... any help... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: BizilStank
1 Replies

5. What is on Your Mind?

Creating a Linux Distro

I have been using Linux OS since 4 years and I'm very interested to know how to create a Linux Distro. I have heard about LFS. I would just like to know, what do I need to create a Linux Distro? I'm not a programmer, if I have to create a Linux Distro, what programming languages do I need to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Auzern
3 Replies

6. Linux

Best Linux desktop distro

I hate the fact that my first post is this. Anyhow, I've been using Linux distros such as Ubuntu, Fedora, Debian, openSUSE, and a few others for quite some time now. I've never had a problem with any distro, thus saying that they were all good in my opinion. I've been reading a lot on different... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Vex
2 Replies

7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Help creating a custom linux distro

Hi all, for a while now I've been working on a linux distro and I'm a couple of tweaks away from it to be perfected so if any experts want to help me out please message me. Thanks in advance. (I know I've posted a similar thread on the same topic but it was closed due to an unhelpful title... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: allk
0 Replies

8. Linux

Best Linux Distro

Hello, I have a Compaq Presario v3000 5 year old laptop, with 1 GB RAM and currently running the (slow and stupid) Windows 7 32 bit, thus I would like to dual boot it with an appropriate distro of Linux that 1) Doesnt consume too much resources (1 GB RAM is not a lot of space) and it ll be... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ajayram
4 Replies

9. Open Source

What is your favorite Linux distro?

What is your favorite Linux distro? and possibly why? Personally, I have Fedora 3 on my computer. I have used Ubuntu and Slackware, too. But I think I liked Ubuntu more, maybe because of its speed and easy installation of packages. (192 Replies)
Discussion started by: milhan
192 Replies
UNCLUTTER(1X)															     UNCLUTTER(1X)

NAME
unclutter - remove idle cursor image from screen SYNOPSIS
unclutter [-display|-d display] [-idle seconds] [-keystroke] [-jitter pixels] [-grab] [-noevents] [-reset] [-root] [-onescreen] [-not] name ... DESCRIPTION
unclutter removes the cursor image from the screen so that it does not obstruct the area you are looking at after it has not moved for a given time. It does not do this if the cursor is in the root window or a button is down. It tries to ignore jitter (small movements due to noise) if you have a mouse that twitches. OPTIONS
-display is followed by the display to open. -idle is followed by the number of seconds between polls for idleness. The default is 5. -keystroke tells unclutter not to use a timeout to determine when to remove the cursor, but to instead wait until a key has been pressed (released, really). -jitter is followed by the amount of movement of the pointer that is to be ignored and considered as random noise. The default is 0. -grab means use the original method of grabbing the pointer in order to remove the cursor. This often doesn't interoperate too well with some window managers. -noevents stops unclutter sending a pseudo EnterNotify event to the X client whose cursor has been stolen. Sending the event helps programs like emacs think that they have not lost the pointer focus. This option is provided for backwards compatibility in case some clients get upset. -reset resets the timeout for idleness after the cursor is restored for some reason (such as a window being pushed or popped) even though the x y coordinates of the cursor have not changed. Normally, the cursor would immediately be removed again. -root means remove the cursor even if it is on the root background, where in principle it should not be obscuring anything useful. -onescreen restricts unclutter to the single screen specified as display, or the default screen for the display. Normally, unclutter will unclutter all the screens on a display. -not is followed by a list of window names where the cursor should not be removed. The first few characters of the WM_NAME property on the window need to match one the listed names. This argument must be the last on the command line. LIMITATIONS
The -keystroke option may not work (that is, the cursor will not disappear) with clients that request KeyRelease events. Games and Xt applications using KeyUp in their translation tables are most likely to suffer from this problem. The most feasible solution is to extend unclutter to use the XTest extension to get all keyboard and mouse events, though this of course requires XTest to be in the server too. The -keystroke option does not distinguish modifier keys from keys which actually generate characters. If desired this could be imple- mented in a simple way by using XLookupString to see if any characters are returned. DIAGNOSTICS
The message someone created a sub-window to my sub-window! means that unclutter thinks a second unclutter is running, and tried to steal the cursor by creating a sub-window to the sub-window already used to steal the cursor. This situation quickly deteriorates into a fight no one can win, so it is detected when possible and the program gives up. AUTHOR
Mark M Martin. cetia 7feb1994. mmm@cetia.fr UNCLUTTER(1X)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:14 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy